PaulR
Well-Known Member
Our starlight 35 has 3 batteries - one we use primarily for engine starting , the other 2 are wired in parallel and used for domestic services with selection of either the engine or domestic via usual off/1/2/both rotary switch.
We have been advised to ensure that supply and service connections for the parallel pair are best wired diagonally one from one of the pairs negative terminal and the other from the OTHER battery in the pair's positive terminal and NOT to connect the parallel linked batteries to the boat only via one battery with the second battery only hooked up to the first battery and not itself directly connected to the boat wiring.
Not a problem - we can redirect the wiring from the positive connection (which goes to the 1/2/both switch) to the second one of the parallel pair rather than the first one but our query is this.
All 3 batteries have a shared connection to the negative boat system - effectively the negative cable connects first to the negative of the engine battery - then from that connection links to the negative of the first of the 2 parallel wired domestic batteries and from there to the negative of the other parallel wired domestic battery. Our understanding (maybe flawed) is that by moving the positive connection to the second of the domestic batteries rather than as currently it first connecting to the positive terminal of the first domestic battery will create this recommended diagonal connection across both of the domestic battery pair rather than the first connection for both neg and pos connections being to the first dom battery only.
It has now been suggested to us that best practise is not to have the negative cable daisy chained along the 3 batteries but to connect the engine battery and the parallel wired domestic batteries separately to the boat - meaning we would need to run a second negative lead from the battery box to the boat - is this right /usual?
Welcome guidance please
We have been advised to ensure that supply and service connections for the parallel pair are best wired diagonally one from one of the pairs negative terminal and the other from the OTHER battery in the pair's positive terminal and NOT to connect the parallel linked batteries to the boat only via one battery with the second battery only hooked up to the first battery and not itself directly connected to the boat wiring.
Not a problem - we can redirect the wiring from the positive connection (which goes to the 1/2/both switch) to the second one of the parallel pair rather than the first one but our query is this.
All 3 batteries have a shared connection to the negative boat system - effectively the negative cable connects first to the negative of the engine battery - then from that connection links to the negative of the first of the 2 parallel wired domestic batteries and from there to the negative of the other parallel wired domestic battery. Our understanding (maybe flawed) is that by moving the positive connection to the second of the domestic batteries rather than as currently it first connecting to the positive terminal of the first domestic battery will create this recommended diagonal connection across both of the domestic battery pair rather than the first connection for both neg and pos connections being to the first dom battery only.
It has now been suggested to us that best practise is not to have the negative cable daisy chained along the 3 batteries but to connect the engine battery and the parallel wired domestic batteries separately to the boat - meaning we would need to run a second negative lead from the battery box to the boat - is this right /usual?
Welcome guidance please